Patent Pending Protected System

Why allow the well-being of your patient to be determined by a disinterested 3rd party
payor?

The ability to create a customized medication/formulation may be the most powerful tool available to you as a physician!Get started today

How does it work?

Prescriber's Choice brings a unique approach to physician dispensing. For the first time, you
will be able to provide your patient with a customized solution that can be distributed at the point
of care. Prescriber's Choice was created to assist physicians with their patients by improving,
patient education, compliance, and ultimately enhanced outcomes.

Sign Up

Contact one of our team members for a free consultation, site evaluation and easily sign
your practice up for our prescription management services.

Start Dispensing

Start dispensing your own custom labeled proprietary formulations, directly from your
in-house lab. You can be dispensing in as little as 1-3 weeks.

Increased Care

Providing customized solutions at the time of visit, you will increase understanding,
compliance, outcomes and overall patient satisfaction.

Reduce Costs

This model reduces overall costs and the burden on the healthcare system.

Doctors are burdened with administrative tasks in their practice, generated by the insurance
companies. While most of these issues are money- and time-related, there is a task that directly
affects the care of the patient - prior authorizations.

Physician costs for interacting with insurance
companies and health plans add up to $37 billion annually. Most of this is associated with
prior
authorizations and formulary requirements.

Practices spend up to 20 hours a week on prior authorization requests alone. These practices spend as much time dealing with insurance companies, as they spend on everything else combined.

70% of patients who encounter prior authorization, do not receive the originally prescribed medication, but rather a substitution.

Specialty medications have limited or NO substitutions. From 2013 to 2015, the amount of medication that required prior authorization quadrupled.

what was once called a prescription pad is now more of a "suggestion pad."